String.prototype.trimEnd() - JavaScript | MDN

Try it

const greeting = "   Hello world!   ";

console.log(greeting);
// Expected output: "   Hello world!   ";

console.log(greeting.trimEnd());
// Expected output: "   Hello world!";

Syntax

Parameters

None.

Return value

A new string representing str stripped of whitespace from its end (right side). Whitespace is defined as white space characters plus line terminators.

If the end of str has no whitespace, a new string is still returned (essentially a copy of str).

Aliasing

After trim() was standardized, engines also implemented the non-standard method trimRight. However, for consistency with padEnd(), when the method got standardized, its name was chosen as trimEnd. For web compatibility reasons, trimRight remains as an alias to trimEnd, and they refer to the exact same function object. In some engines this means:

js

String.prototype.trimRight.name === "trimEnd";

Examples

Using trimEnd()

The following example trims whitespace from the end of str, but not from its start.

js

let str = "   foo  ";

console.log(str.length); // 8

str = str.trimEnd();
console.log(str.length); // 6
console.log(str); // '   foo'

Specifications

Specification
ECMAScript® 2027 Language Specification
# sec-string.prototype.trimend

Browser compatibility

See also

Help improve MDN

Learn how to contribute

This page was last modified on by MDN contributors.